It's not just Democratic lawmakers ringing the road-funding bell. Gov. Scott Walker's former DOT secretary, Mark Gottlieb, recently started to publicly criticize his former boss for ignoring the state's transportation needs.

Walker shocked many observers this week when he failed to even mention transportation funding at the GOP state convention.

Walker followed that up Monday, directing his agencies to come up with new budgets with no spending increases, including for transportation. And that’s the opposite of what has been recommended unanimously by a special commission put together by Walker himself.

“It’s nice to pose for holy pictures and say, ‘We’re cutting taxes,’ but then, the people at the local level are the ones that look like the devil because their roads are going to pot,” Doyle said.

Walker's no new road-funding stance is in direct contrast with what key state lawmakers in his own party have called for.

Doyle wonders just how bad the roads have to get before the state recognizes the need to take some kind of action to help fund repairs for cities like La Crosse.

“The streets in La Crosse are just as worthy of being fixed as the streets anywhere else,” Doye said. “We need to, at the state level, to step and accept that type of responsibility.”